The
information on the sites listed below is NOT primary source
information.
Although I take care to proofread everything that I do, I make mistakes
that I don't catch. Much of this information is from lists typed
by someone else; they also may have made mistakes.
The only assurance you can have of 100% accuracy is to view the
original
records for yourself...and then hope that the original recorder was
accurate!

Beulah
Gangaware, my source for most of the cemetery listings and other
information
on this site, died on February 18, 2002. Her obituary is
transcribed
here.

Al Hosbach, who acquired Beulah's collection, copied it, and sent it on
to me, at his expense, died on June 24, 2003. Al's obituary is
transcribed
here.

John O'Brien has shared with us deaths
listed
in the Washington Star newspaper for 1941,
1954
and 1957. The
Washington
Star is available on microfilm at the Warren County Public Library and
Washington Borough Library, or from Rutgers through inter-library loan.

Colonial Naturalization List: A complete list of the names of all persons who
were naturalized during
the
Colonial period, compiled from Allinson’s Acts of the General Assembly.

West Jersey Tract Dwellers: Memorandum of
applications made for purchasing
& Leasing Farms divided and undivided in the West Jersey Society
1782 & 1783.

Warren County, New Jersey, 1931:
This was originally a 60-page book; it has been shortened a bit for use
on the net, but all information regarding Warren County people,
businesses
and towns has been left in its entirety. This book is from the
collection
of Bob Riddle.

There's some history of the Saucon Lutheran Church, Easton, PA,
and
St. James Evangelical Lutheran Church, Greenwich, NJ, contained in "Historic
Easton; from the Window of a Trolley-Car," by William J. Heller,
published
in the Pennsylvania German magazine in 1911.

In 1911, Phillipsburg celebrated its Charter
Jubilee. Marilyn Souders has shared with us the program from
that historic event.

The Centennial Celebration of the Presbyterian
Church of Harmony, November 17-24, 1907, gives frustratingly small
glimpses of some of the members of this church, and better data on the
minsters of the church during the first century.

"Recollections of Baptistown"
was a series of articles written for and published in the Hunterdon
Independent,
Frenchtown, N.J., 1893 - 1897. An index for all the surnames in
these
articles can be found here.

The Warren Journal
was published in Belvidere, Warren County, NJ. I list here some
marriages,
deaths and odds and ends found from searching microfilms of the Journal.

Dennis Sutton has transcribed marriages
and deaths in Hunterdon County from the Hunterdon Democrat,from
1838 to 1847, and from the Hunterdon County Democrat from 1848
to
1880. Many of the folks in these newspapers have the same
surnames
as those in Warren and Sussex Counties.

In 1874, F. W. Beers & Co. published an Atlas
of Warren County. Each map shows the name of the person who
lived
in each place on the map!

In the Genealogical Magazine of New Jersey, I found a list of
1773
- 1774 New Jersey Rateables.
I
list here those names from Knowlton Township, then Sussex County,
NJ.
For a list of all the towns which are now part of Sussex County, see
Nancy
Pascal's site when it becomes available again.

Marsha Smith has shared a list of delinquent
taxpayers living in the Great Meadows/Dansville area of Warren
County,
1789-1793.

Not everyone in New Jersey supported the idea of independence
from
England. Those who did not were branded "Loyalists"
and fled to Canada. A list of some 48 Loyalists who arrived in
Niagara,
Upper Canada (now Ontario) in 1787 is shown here.

In New Jersey, beginning July 4, 1804, the birth
of every child born of a slave was required to be recorded with the
county, to begin the gradual abolishment of slavery in the state.
Included here is a list of those births in Warren and Sussex County.

A family Bible gives a list of births, marriages and deaths in
the
Vought
and Howell families.

Some post cards, one post
marked as early as 1903, of scenes around Warren County.

Some more helpful links

More information about Warren County can be found here,
and there's a link at the bottom of the page to the Warren County
GenWeb
page.

Nancy Pascal's site
is an excellent resource for anyone searching New
Jersey for ancestors. Here's hoping her glitches are soon a
thing of the past, so her web site is available again.

For information about Newark, NJ, Virtual
Newark is a "don't miss" site.

My research into a state 400 miles from my home has been greatly
assisted by the folks at the Special
Collections and University Archives at Rutgers University in New
Brunswick,
NJ. At the bottom of the Special Collections linked page is an
email
address. I wrote to them telling what I was looking for.
After
they located the information, the sent me a request form, I sent a
check,
and in a week I had copies of the information I needed.